Showing posts with label waterboys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label waterboys. Show all posts

Monday, May 20, 2019

Crawfish & Caviar - Anthony Thistlethwaite (R2 RnR Magazine 2013)

Here's another blast from the past, an interview with former Waterboys saxophonist Anthony 'Anto' Thistlethwaite that I compiled for R2/RnR magazine back in 2013 when Anto was preparing to rejoin The Waterboys for a tour celebrating the Fisherman's Blues album, around then, I guess, the time of the expanded Fisherman's Box album release. 

I've met Anthony a few times, firstly when I was researching for my Strange Boat book on The Waterboys, and later at various Saw Doctors gigs. I note, with some sadness, my mention in the interview about the 'temporary' hiatus of the Saw Doctors, which largely, despite a few ad-hoc get together shows, still goes on to this day. I really miss them. Haven't talked to, or seen, Anto in a few years now - I think the last time we talked was on the telephone for a piece I was writing for Vive Le Rock about the great Nikki Sudden, who Anto had played with on various of Nikki's LPs - but I always found him to be one of the nicest, most genuine, people that I've ever had the pleasure of interviewing. 

I'm always amazed how often he turns up on records that I love, such as those by Nikki Sudden, including ones that I've been discovering for the first time, as was the case with Nikki's 'lost' album with Simon Carmody and Johnny Fean, The Last Bandits In The World, for last year's RSD, which came expanded with recordings featuring Anthony and fellow Mike Scott comrades Steve Wickham and Max 'Lizard' Edieor tunes that I remember from way back when...  Bruce Foxton's first solo records, Robyn Hitchcock's Groovy Decay. He's on The Psychedelic Furs Book of Days album and Working With Fire & Steel by China Crisis... among many others.

Looking back at this piece, actually it's rather unfocused (my fault entirely) but I think it does at least describe some of the mercurial adventures that Anto has enjoyed along his way. He'd kindly allowed me to reprint a piece of his own in Strange Boat which described his year busking the streets of Paris in the early 80s, pre-Waterboys, and I guess if you've read that, this interview is at least a bit of a companion piece, even if I didn't quite manage to do this gently understated but fascinating and hugely talented musician the proper justice his wide-ranging work deserves.


A stalwart of the original Waterboys, Anthony Thistlethwaite was Mike Scott’s constant collaborator from The Red & The Black, their pre-Waterboys band, through to the Celtic summer of Room To Roam. Twice-over he’s been Davy Carton and Leo Moran’s staunchest ally in The Saw Doctors, including an almost unbroken fourteen-year run as their bassist, though he’s best known for being the man who Mike Scott describes in his autobiography as ‘The Human Saxophone’. 

With the ‘Docs on temporary hiatus and ‘Anto’ about to re-join The Waterboys for series of shows to follow a seven-disc anthology of the legendary Fisherman’s Blues sessions, he’s a number of exciting projects developing. I phone him at his Irish home to chat about these, and about his solo albums, which he’s made digitally available via Facebook. Knowing him as I do, though, I’m not surprised the first thing he wants to talk about is his unabashed delight at someone else’s good fortune.

“Mick Taylor has been playing with The Rolling Stones recently and I find that very heartening,” he tells me. He’s a huge admirer of their former guitarist. “He played on my solo albums and was very good to me. I always loved the Stones when he was with them. I look on YouTube and see the numbers he’s played on in the last few weeks and it’s great to see him enjoying himself. In his youth he was very demure on stage. These days he seems full of beans, playing very well. I’m delighted for him.”


I’d already planned to ask about their work together. “In 1982 I’d just started playing with Mike, but I thought I’d do some recording on my own in a studio down by Westbourne Grove. The studio engineer said, ‘You know, we had Mick Taylor in here a couple of weeks back’. We found the invoice for Mick’s session… with his address on it. I plucked up courage and knocked on his door, explaining I was recording in the studio that he’d been using and wondered if he’d play guitar for me. I was really chancing my arm. He was very nice but said that he’d have to hear what I was working on. Some kind of quality control, I’d guess! But I went back a few days later with a cassette, played him the track, and he came down and it was brilliant! I went around a few times, took my sax and he’d have a go on it, and we made friends, in a small way. Then he got a call from Dylan’s manager to work on what became Infidels and I didn’t see him for a few years.

“Things may not have worked out as he might have hoped, but he’s always had an amazing talent.  I’d have some tracks for him to play on, and it was like he wouldn’t have to learn the chords… there was one song where he played the whole thing on the first pass and he’d never heard it before, it was just innate.”

Mick’s contribution to Anthony’s solo records includes his 1997 Crawfish & Caviar album, noted as being principally recorded in St Petersburg and Louisiana and being by turn Russian folk and Cajun-tinged. Before encountering Mike Scott, Thistlethwaite had spent a weekend that became a year busking Parisian streets; at the CafĂ© Mazet on the Rue St. AndrĂ© des Arts you contacted him by telephoning for ‘Tony-Le-saxo’. But these further-flung recordings were intriguing.


“I’d been on the road with The Saw Doctors for three years and felt like a break. I intended going to Prague and disappearing in some mysterious way, but when I got there it didn’t really fit the bill! So I caught this train that went up through the Ukraine and ended-up in St Petersburg. There I met the bassist from a group called DDT, the Russian equivalent of Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band, a big band with an intelligent and charismatic vocalist. I was telling him what I’d been doing in the West and he said ‘You’ll have to rehearse with us’. I went down with my sax and mandolin and ended-up travelling around darkest Russia with this bunch of lunatics, visiting places I’d never imagined and flying in aeroplanes with chickens in the cabins! Just what the doctor ordered.”

While in St Petersburg he received contact from Boris Grebenshchikov, “a sort of Russian Bob Dylan who heard I was in town. Apprehensively I arranged to meet him, someone of such stature. He was sitting in his flat and in the middle was a coffee table with a bottle of single malt Scotch and two glasses. ‘Welcome, Anthony. We will drink the whisky. We will talk’. I didn’t normally drink whisky… but we finished the bottle and by then were quite good friends! So I ended up playing with his band Aquarium. It meant I was playing with two of the biggest bands in Russia, so I thought I’d better do some recording. I got the rhythm section from one, some players from the other and went and recorded.” 

If that explained the album’s Russian element, the Louisiana part came from happy coincidences that led Anto into finding a hitherto unknown family branch. Back in ’87 he’d played on ‘Ship Of Fools’, the first World Party record. “There’s a town called Opelousas, near Lafayette in the Cajun country, with a large contingent of Thistlethwaites. Now, ‘Ship Of Fools’ was a hit in the States and one of the Thistlethwaites there saw my name on the sleeve and sent a message. ‘Hello, I live in Louisiana, I’m a musician, and we have the same name’. A couple of years later I was on a US tour with The Waterboys, so he came down and we got talking. He said, ‘Have you heard of this book by Bernard Thistlethwaite?’ That was my grandfather who’d spent years researching the family, wrote a book and gave copies to his relatives. I’ve a copy here. The fact that he had a copy in Opelousas meant that we absolutely were related! Sharon [Shannon] was with The Waterboys at the time and she wrote this instrumental track, which is on her first album, called ‘Anto’s Cajun Cousins’ with a Cajun lilt to it! They seemed to know everybody around the heart of Cajun and Zydeco music, its black music equivalent. They’d known Clifton Chenier, who was a Zydeco accordion player. His wife was their nanny when they were kids. I was really thrilled to meet these people, such as Christine Balfa, from Balfa Toujours.  After my adventure in Russia I had half an album and what I needed to do was to go to Louisiana and make the other half. I spent three months in Opelousas, inviting everyone I could down to the studio and just had a great time, however ridiculous it sounds now!”

Current endeavours are closer to home, with Leo Moran and others of the Irish music scene in The Cabin Collective, who’ve already had their first television appearance, on Ireland’s The Late Late Show, performing their debut single, ‘Lines Are Fading’, again with Leo on an acoustic tour of America in September, and then from late November through December with Mike Scott and Waterboys mainstay Steve Wickham where they’ll not just be playing songs from Fisherman’s Blues, but generally rekindling their three-way magic. 


Talking about The Cabin Collective first – their single is a totally infectious romp – Anto explains: “Outside of Tuam, where Leo lives, there’s this fellow called Larry, and his lady, who live in this Scandinavian log house. He’s had a scene going on there with a recording set-up, and people have made albums in the cabin. Keith Mullins’ band, who supported The Saw Doctors, recorded there. So we were friends with them, and with Noelie McDonald who’d also supported us. They’d been congregating at the cabin and, being less busy than normal this year, I got invited to go down there with Leo and Rickie [O’Neill, Saw Doctors drummer], so we joined forces. Now there’s a band with two drummers, three singer-songwriters, or four if you want to count me, I play sax and a bit of mandolin, and there are nine of us involved. We got a chance to play on national Irish TV before we’d even played a gig!”

That musical comradeship which permeates through Ireland’s West Coast is also reflected in his re-embarking with The Waterboys. He’s played occasionally with Mike Scott since parting company when Scott moved to America in 1990, including a couple of shows with Scott and Wickham last year in Spiddal, home to later Fisherman’s Blues sessions. “We did a charity gig for a dear friend of ours there: Mike, Steve and myself. There was so much demand that we did two shows in one day. We do still have that wonderful chemistry.”

There’s real excitement in the three of them working together again. “We’ve also got Trevor Hutchinson [Fisherman’s Blues bassist] who plays in Lunasa, a great Irish trad band, and I’ll be playing sax and mandolin. The music from that era was very free-flowing. I think Mike wants to capture that spontaneity.” 

Before then comes Anto and Leo’s American road trip. It’s different to the things they’ve done before, a stripped-down adventure, the two of them driving across the States in a hire car. “Leo will be singing songs familiar to Saw Doctors fans; I might sing a few of my songs, maybe a Dylan or something so obscure that I don’t know who wrote it. We’ll have fun. It’s quite refreshing, doing something without relying on pounding drums and 100 decibels. I’ll play mandolin, sax, harmonica, might play guitar… not really sure! It’s an unknown quantity. There’s something wonderfully delicate about playing acoustic music without a rhythm section because every note counts and you can have great effect with some tiny thing. I toured with Donovan once and that was a joy because you could hear everything and everything I did mattered.”

So while on a practical level the current halt to The Saw Doctors activity has left a gap, it’s clear that this versatile and engaging musician has good friends who’ll take him off on tangents, just as his Russian and Louisiana travels did way back when. Here’s to them all.


Sunday, December 28, 2008

2008


Where did I get to in 2008, now that I look back to my final blog posting of 2007? Well, I'd have to say that in personal terms I had an enjoyable and successful year freed from the rigid structures of the 9 to 5. I did a marketing course a few weeks back where I was asked about a typical working day. Ha! The previous day I'd spent the morning working on some credit management stuff, driven to Devon in the afternoon to do a presentation to a prospective client on e-billing opportunities and been on the phone for an hour in the evening interviewing Steve Lake from anarcho-punk band Zounds. And that wasn't an untypical mix of jobs, so I can say that certainly 2008 was varied and interesting, if a little bit 'false' in the sense that I had one particular contract that provided the financial foundations for all the other stuff that I was free to do. And it was a year, as I anticipated, where I built financially for 2009. Not quite as well as I should perhaps have done but enough that I can start the year still not feeling the pressure of impending overdrafts.

The festivals book, Festivalized, has occupied a lot of writing time and still there are many potential contributors still to be interviews, and previous chats waiting to be transcribed, and it's clear that any and all spare time in January will be devoted to finishing this project to final manuscript stage, but I think both Bridget and I are very excited about the material that's been gathered and the extensive list of contributors assembled. The biography of Armand and Michaela Denis that I talked about at the end of last year, however, still remains just that... talk; it's very much the next item on the agenda and I'll be spending time in the first quarter of 2009 trying to get this one off the ground. There's two or three other possibilities as well, so I'll be pulling together a collection of proposals and once again revisiting the idea of acquiring an agent.

I continued to write for Record Collector and Rock N Reel, contributed to the Independent and other places, and felt I made some modest in roads into getting my name about. The sleeve notes for Freq and Cherry Red's two Hawkwind compilations were particularly pleasing jobs. The last quarter of the year was particularly intensive with a couple of projects that should see the light of day in 2009 all being well. And, as Bridget noted the other day, one of the great things about 2009 has been the wealth of great contacts with fascinating and eloquent people that we've had through the festivals book.

2009, I want to achieve another book sale, gain more freelance work with a wider range of magazines and newspapers, and expand my writing 'subjects' so that I'm not so dependent on writing about music. On the other hand, I've plenty of CDs waiting review for the Spacerock blog and there'll be a major overhaul of that over the coming week.

On the credit management front, this should prove a busy year if I market my self properly and I need to set-out from day one as I mean to continue, pitching for work, networking and generally getting myself noticed and contracted. One thing is for sure, in this awful business environment there is work out there for me and what I must do is chase it for all I'm worth.

I caught up with the guys from Space Ritual at Glastonbury Assembly Rooms a few weeks ago and enjoyed again chatting with Nik Turner and Jerry Richards. And at Falmouth Princess Pavilions in early December, enjoyed meeting up for the first time since the publication of the Waterboys book with Anto Thistlethwaite who now plays with the Saw Doctors. One of life's gentlemen. A couple of days later, and I was a Truro Hall for Cornwall, relishing the opportunity to interview Jeremy from the Levellers for the festival book and, knowing him to be a big Waterboys fan, pressing a copy of Strange Boat on him! Fascinating chat about his days on the travelling scene and a great gig as well.











Nik Turner, Ian Abrahams



Jerry Richards, Nik Turner, Bridget Wishart,
Ian Abrahams

Monday, September 17, 2007

Praise for Strange Boat

I received an e-mail through Myspace the other day that I was particularly chuffed with, concerning Strange Boat and sent by someone who had only recently discovered the Waterboys through hearing Fisherman’s Blues on a car radio. That inspired him to buy the album and subsequently the latest Waterboys album, Book of Lightning, through Amazon, which in turn resulted in a purchase of Strange Boat.

“I do love the crazy tales of New York Dolls type excesses,” wrote my correspondent. “But in the absence of this type of behaviour in the Waterboys, you have produced a no less intriguing view of the bands/Mike Scott's development and motivating psychology in an extremely intelligent and balanced way.” Which was a nicely glowing endorsement, but not really the point of mentioning this very kind message.

“I finished the book in a day,” he added. “Being a Waterboys novice I was not able to fully appreciate your commentary of some of the albums with which I am not familiar but found your views on those I knew (Fisherman's Blues and Book of Lightning) spot on. I now intend to collect all their albums and when so done will read your book again.” And this is what really made me warm and fuzzy, to be honest. It’s the thought that the book has helped along a new fan’s enthusiasm for Mike Scott’s music and has played a small part in encouraging someone to seek out the music I was writing about. That’s something that tells me I’ve achieved something with this book.

I had a similar experience recently on the Yahoo Waterpeople discussion group. A new poster to that list (not aware that I was a member and would see the comments first hand) commented that, having been a fan in the 80s, “Strange Boat has rekindled my interest in The Waterboys.”

“The book is decent in a genre that often disappoints, I can't say it is earth shattering but it has made me want to plug the gaps in my Waterboys/Mike Scott collection.” I think that’s good enough for me right now! I don’t expect to be considered in the upper echelons of rock music journalism (yet!), I haven’t written a book as definitive as Revolution in the Head or England’s Dreaming. But if I’ve pulled together a text that has reminded its readers what a singular talent Mike Scott is, or what a wonderfully diverse band the Waterboys are, then I’m satisfied that my work on this one was reasonably well done. I know people like the stories of rock excesses, the sex and drugs and rock ‘n’ roll thing but I think there’s also room in the genre of rock biography for the careful and thoughtful appraisal of a body of work. And in the end, we might like the lurid and the over-the-top, but we also want a book that says, “Hey, this person whose work you’ve invested so much of your own time and emotions into, y’know, is a creature of flesh and bone and human failings. But still your faith and your commitment wasn’t misplaced. The work, and the person, was really worth it.

I don’t know what Mike Scott made of Strange Boat. My impression is that of a perfectionist and of someone for whom a third-party assessment of his work couldn’t ever really be correct however well intentioned. But to have achieved a little in opening some of the readers up to his wider body of work, I’m comfortable with the end result.

Friday, June 08, 2007

Several Updates in Search of a Thread

OK, conversion to SAP at work and due dilligence on sale of another part of the business leaves me out of breath and barely finding time to write let alone blog. So, a few very quick updates to keep things alive and kicking here!

Update! Terrific review of Strange Boat in Record Collector this month. I am 'bang-up' biographer apparently! Of course, it's a bit like 'pants' ... I never know whether 'pants' is good or bad. It's a generation thing. But a fab review and I'm really thrilled with it. At the same time, our local paper, The West Briton, devoted a quarter page to the book (and it's author!). Lovely.

Talking about whether 'pants' is good or bad, I do recall being in St Ives one summer evening waiting for someone, when an open top car with an American tourist stopped. 'Sir, you're pants', he said. I'm stratching my head. Is that good or bad? And why does he want to tell me either way? I manage a small smile. 'Sir, you're pants' ... again. Ah, 'Sir, your pants'. My trousers have indeed been dive-bombed by a local seagull.

Update! I spent a highly enjoyable twenty minutes on a trans-atlantic phone call to Wayne Kramer of MC5 a couple of weeks back ... talking counter-culture and politics for a Q&A to go with a review of John Sinclair's Guitar Army, recently reissued as a 35th Anniversary edition. Wayne's an easy to talk to, no pretensions sort of chap and the call was highly enjoyable and quote worthy. Great stuff.

Update! Shot up to Bristol last month for the annual Comics Expo event, which mainly entailed loitering in the bar with my old mate Paul Cornell and talking comics and Doctor Who. Paul's episodes of the 3rd series of Who, 'Human Nature' and 'Family of Blood' have just been broadcast and qualify as two of the very best episodes of the show ... ever. Just thought I'd name drop next year's sure-fire Hugo award winner!

Update! Just received a few promo discs of interest. Black Widow Records, from Italy, kindly sent me review copies of their latest prog/goth releases. Taro Pede in Magiam Versus by Jacula I'll be covering in Record Collector very soon. I'm also looking to place commentary on their other discs Re-Animaton, an HP Lovecraft concept thing by Paul Roland, by Areknames and Love Hate Round Trip and Witchflower by Wicked Minds. I'm also currently working on a potential review of Yesterday I Saw You Kissing Tiny Flowers by Alison Faith Levy & Mushroom (4ZeroRecords). This weekend, my SpaceRockReviews blog should be updated with EMI's remaster of Space Ritual and the fantastic new Litmus album Planetfall, as well as the Mushroom disc I think. Meantime, check out Record Collector for my reviews of a Strawbs CD reissue and the ABWH/Yes DVD from Voiceprint Records.

Friday, April 06, 2007

Strange Boat Now On Sale

Three cartons of books arrived on Wednesday containing copies of Strange Boat - Mike Scott & The Waterboys and so this weekend is at least partly dedicated to parcelling up complimentary copies and purchases from my own on-line sale of the book which can be found on the Ian @ Ebay sidebar link.

SAF have done their usual terrific job on presentation, a really well presented trade paperback edition that looks a substantial package for the £12.99 price point - I'm delighted with the work they've done on this. They also have it available on their new website www.safpublishing.co.uk with a nice introductory discount applicable to all their catalogue.

It's been over two years since the publication of Sonic Assassins, so whilst I'm pleased to have moved on from having just one book published (once is a nice fluke, but surely twice is the modest start of a career!). I'm very conscious that I must get another placed and in progress early, with a target of having two on contract before the year is over.

People who know me, know that change is afoot in the 9-5 life with, shall we say, a more flexible lifestyle looming and so it's the perfect opportunity to stretch my creative legs and get projects circulating and underway. I'm particularly enthusiastic about the Festivals book being planned with Bridget Wishart, as we've got some great pledges of cooperation on this one and the proposal for it looks good.

I've also very much enjoyed recent work on the PR front with Alan Davey, publicising his new CD and writing his press release - there's an area where I'd like to do more work and I'll be seeking out record labels that might subcontract copywriting to freelancers and working hard to develop this area of writing.

Exciting times ahead, I predict!